Since the government announced the schedule of byelection for vacant seats of local bodies, the aspirants have started electioneering by setting up election offices in the district.
As many as 13 posts of Nazims and one seat of Naib Nazim had fallen vacant when 11 Nazims of the union councils fought the election of MPA after tendering their resignation. Four of them were elected MPAs while seven others were defeated.
The elected MPAs are: Mian Mazhar Javed, Lalla Shakeelur Rahman, Chaudhry Zahid Pervaiz and Chaudhry Shabbir Ahmad. Those who could not succeed are Dr Zafar Chaudhry, Engineer Ashraf Butt, Mian Iqbal Dhariwal, Chaudhry Irshad Ahmad Cheema, Nasir Ahmad Cheema, Rana Asif and Adil Farooq Khan.
Nazims Chaudhry Ataullah Virk (Mari Khurd village of union council) and Rana Muhammad Hussain (Zahid Colony UC) were killed by their rivals. Naib Nazim of Ghakhar union council Hafiz Zafar Yasin Butt died about a month ago.
According to the election commission, the nomination papers would be accepted on March 3 and 4. Objections could be raised on March 6 and 7. Scrutiny of nomination papers would be held on March 8 and 9. The election symbol would be allotted on March 17 after displaying the final list. The byelection would be held on March 28.
The PPP, the PML-N and the PML-J held separate meetings to reviewed the current political situation and nominate the aspirants for Nazims of union councils and five seats of union councils of the city.
The party leaders suggested that strong candidates should be supported in byelection to ensure their success.
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The Pakistan Wapda Hydro Electric Central Labour Union has opposed the privatization of Wapda. The union threatened that power supply would be suspended across the country and all Wapda employees would come on the roads if the decision is not reversed by the government.
Union's regional chairman Iqbal Dar told workers at a recent meeting at Bakhtiar Labour Hall here that privatization of Wapda was not justified.
It was unwise because both the consumers and Wapda employees would suffer because of enhancement of power supply tariff by the multinational companies.
He said that the Benazir Bhutto government handed over various power plants to multinational companies as part of privatization. As a result, the power tariff was enhanced by Wapda and the consumers were suffering uptill now.
Union leaders Ehsanullah, Chaudhry Abdul Ghafoor, Rana Umer Draz, Mian Ataur Rahman and others also opposed the privatization of Wapda and demanded that the government should take the decision back immediately.
They extended their cooperation to central labour union about the future line of action.
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The High Commissioner of Kenya, Muhammad Omer Soba, has said that a free trade pact between Pakistan and Kenya was the need of the time which could be helpful in strengthening the economies of the two countries.
He was speaking at a recent meeting of the Gujranwala Chamber of Commerce and Industry here. He said that he would constitute Pakistan-Kenya trade promotion association himself for the promotion of import and export between two countries with the coordination of traders and industrialists.
Mr Soba pointed out that many industrialists and traders, settled in Kenya, were playing an active role in the progress and prosperity of the two countries. He said that Pakistan and India were coming close to one another and it was time that Pakistan and Kenya made efforts for a free trade pact.
He hinted that Kenya would export tea and import rice from Pakistan.
Earlier, GCCI president Sheikh Shaukat Javed and other members welcomed Mr Soba and apprised him of the quality of products made in Gujranwala.
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The traders and public transport vehicle owners expressed resentment against the failure to repair the GT Road from Lahore to Gujranwala and demanded that it should be constructed and repaired on priority basis.
At a meeting held here, they pointed out that GT Road between Lahore and Gujranwala has been destroyed and ditches have developed at many places. Vehicles were being damaged and the commuters faced lot of problems.
They said that ditches were causing fatal accidents but the national highway authority did not bother to repair the road. They said that the motorway police imposes fines on the vehicle owners who diverted their vehicles on to safe track to avoid road accidents and compelled them to drive on the second track.
Costly atta making the poor poorer
By Nusrat Nasarullah
The atta price fluctuation and its rise has been going on for some weeks now, but there is truly a class of citizens amidst us who have been both uninformed and unaffected. This makes it pertinent to underline that when we complain of the rising prices of essential foodstuffs in particular, we are not referring to them. They are a class unto themselves, shall we say.
Perhaps to focus on the price of something as fundamental as atta is to take notice of the domestic budget of the majority of the people around - urban and rural both. It is to underline vulnerability of the kitchen budget in particular, a theme that does not get underlined in our media in the human terms that it should. And as frequently.
One says this because in all the atta price rise that has been on, eroding the purchasing power of fixed salary groups in particular, thought goes out to the inadequacy of public focus on this atta unavailability. And why there has been no advertisement from the ministry of food and agriculture, for instance, to remind citizens that the 'situation is very much under control'.
Is that standard operating procedure? For in the recent, or rather current, bird flu fear that has depressed the chicken market and its pricing, the ministry of health was very 'prompt' in issuing print media advertisements telling citizens to consume chicken and egg 'as usual'. And in the same newspapers there were stories from sounder sources and more authentic spokesmen who cautioned the public.
Rather funny, said one Karachiite as he referred to the health ministry advertisement. I reminded him about the way in which the Clifton beach pollution was handled by official quarters, while the environmental magnitude steadily escalated into grim, grave proportions.
One has been unable to understand the comforting tone of official voices, over the years in the face of one crisis after another which has almost but destroyed credibility of all assurances and clarifications - not just a reflection on the media operators, but also those whom they have represented. Little wonder though.
Take this atta crisis. While the authorities have announced that atta prices have been fixed per kilo, and that atta sale points have been announced for Karachi, the general response is that those prices are unreal. A number of people I spoke to during the last few days all said that they had bought atta at prices higher than what the newspapers had been saying. One housewife's reaction was like this: "why do newspapers publish these atta rates which never exist in the market? Not just atta but anything most of the time.
In fact the fluctuation in prices which is the outcome of the lack of scruples of the traders and the businessmen, who are in connivance with the authorities." Almost a typical response from a housewife - a class that takes the brunt of price rises and seasonal fluctuation that goes on throughout the year.
Two news reports during the week on the atta prices need mention here. The first said that 'Steps taken to sell flour at Rs 11.5 per kilogram'. Now this was decided by a 'high level meeting' held on Wednesday which decided to form 'inspection teams' to keep a 'strict' check on flour prices throughout the city. It decided to control the prices and ensure effectiveness of the price checking mechanism.
And the other report: "Atta sale points notified" on February 20 (Friday) which said that "in line with the decisions taken at a high level meeting at the Civic Centre on Wednesday, arrangements have been finalized to ensure the availability of wheat flour in adequate quantity at all the 187 Bachat Bazaars as well as in all areas of the metropolis."
So from the look of things there is hope. Atta will be available at cheaper prices than Rs14 per kilogram or Rs16 and Rs17 that consumers have been paying. But the ordinary people are unwilling to believe that this will really happen, and in fact one has heard distrusting individuals who argue that eventually the price is going to settle at higher levels than what has been officially decided. The next few days and the next couple of weeks will tell. Fingers crossed?
An English daily from Karachi reported on Friday that "Atta goes beyond the poor's reach". The owner of a ration depot in Karachi has reportedly feared that "there could be riots due to the non-availability of atta, and its unaffordablility at the prevailing prices." Then he referred to the Nawaz Sharif era.
An interesting aspect of the atta context at the moment is that there are such economists who contend that there is no wheat shortage, even though there are reports of atta shortage from other places in the country also. And bear in mind that the prices of the ordinary Naan and Chapati have gone up.
The common man is baffled while experts and economists (in Islamabad and elsewhere) debate and discuss the issue. Is there a shortage (which there is) caused by recent wheat crop? Or is it because of the reports that there is wheat smuggling that takes place, and/or is it because of the hoarding that has been done by the flour mills which were trying to create an artificial shortage and exploit the situation? We have heard all this before.
Something else comes to mind. In all that has been going on vis-a-vis the atta prices having gone up for quite some time now, there is so far no plausible explanation of what has truly happened. What has gone wrong is something that has not been explained. It surely is not because people have started eating more atta. People have indeed bought Pakistani-assembled cars at exorbitant prices, and paid premiums that have been made to appear as enigmatic. Everyone knew and knows that there are people who made money out of the whole exercise, and continue to do so.
There are others who have been able to afford mutton, beef, chicken and fish at any price, and the high prices in these cases may have been the result of supply and demand, as simple economics makes it out to be.
But as ordinary citizens, one does not understand the atta shortage - if everything is as fine as is being made out to be - is just a management of the shortage facilities, which are inadequate. Or reportedly inadequate.
It is somewhat mysterious as far as the common man goes why atta prices have quietly risen, making one wonder whether any manipulation has been going on. There is a need to look into the situation in depth, and with a view to injecting that accountability process that we have in the country.
Assuming that the prices of atta will decline in the foreseeable future, what this outspoken Karachiite said to me was this: "There is a need to look into the possibility of bringing down the prices of the ordinary Naan and Chapati that have gone up. That is where the poor has been not hit most. His daily bread."
We talked over lunch (and there was no shortage of atta (whatever that means) and a colleague remarked that we live in a society that seeks to make cars cheaper, and which has cheaper chicken (for other reasons). That is the irony. Our Naan and Chapati have become costlier, and as a contrast western food franchises are prospering.